Rev. 6/8/2006

Newton’s Second Law – Force, velocity and acceleration.

Science Concepts:

Newton’s Second Law tells us that a net force acting on an object will change its velocity by changing either its speed or its direction or both.

Duration:

1 hour

Essential Questions:
What are the relationships between force, mass, and acceleration?

About this Poster

The Swift Gamma-Ray Burst Explorer is a NASA mission which is observing the highest energy explosions in the Universe–gamma-ray bursts (GRBs). Launched in November, 2004, Swift is detecting and observing hundreds of these explosions, vastly increasing scientists’ knowledge of these enigmatic events. Education and public outreach (E/PO) is also one of the goals of the mission. The NASA E/PO Group at Sonoma State University develops classroom activities inspired by the science and technology of the Swift mission, and which are aligned with the National Science Education Standards. This poster and activity are part of a set of four educational wallsheets which are aimed at grades 6-8, and which can be displayed as a set or separately in the classroom. The front of the poster illustrates Newton’s Second Law, demonstrating how a mass is accelerated when a force is applied to it. Descriptions of the drawings can be found below.

The activity below provides several simple illustrations of Newton’s Second Law. The activity is complete and ready to use in your classroom with only paper and pencils. The activity is designed and laid out so that you can easily make copies of the student worksheet and the other handouts.

The NASA E/PO Group at Sonoma State University:

• Prof. Lynn Cominsky: Project Director

• Dr. Phil Plait: Education Resource Director

• Sarah Silva: Program Manager

• Tim Graves: Information Technology Consultant

• Aurore Simonnet: Scientific Illustrator

• Laura Dilbeck, Project Assistant

We gratefully acknowledge the advice and assistance of the NASA Astrophysics division Educator Ambassador (EA) team, with extra thanks to EAs Dr. Tom Arnold, Bruce Hemp, Rae McEntyre, and Rob Sparks and to Dr. Kevin McLin. This poster set represents an extensive revision of the materials originally created by Dr. Laura Whitlock and Kara Granger for the Swift E/PO program. The Swift Education and Public Outreach website is http://swift.sonoma.edu. This poster and other Swift educational materials can be found at: http://swift.sonoma.edu/education/

Description of the front of the poster:

Waterfall: As the water flows over the edge of the rocks, gravity, which exerts a downward force on it, causes it to accelerate downward: the water moves faster the longer it falls.

Person throwing a ball: When someone throws a ball, she is applying a force to it and accelerating it. As soon as she lets go, gravity, which also applies a force, accelerates the ball downward.

Cube being pulled to the upper right: A heavy cube sits on a surface. If someone applies a force to it that is both stronger than gravity and the frictional forces on it, then the object will accelerate.

Girl on a swing: When a girl swings, gravity accelerates her downward from the top of her arc. Her inertia keeps her moving at the bottom, and the force of the tension in the ropes makes her move in an arc upwards. Gravity then pulls her down, decelerating her until she stops, and the motion repeats. Note: We generally use the word deceleration to mean that something slows down, while acceleration means that something speeds up. In Newton's laws, any change in velocity is called an acceleration, so a deceleration is really a type of acceleration. This can be a little confusing at first, so just remember that any change in speed or direction is referred to as an acceleration for the purposes of Newton's laws.

Swivel chair: The velocity of an object includes its speed and its direction. Acceleration is the change in velocity, so changing the speed and/or the direction of an object is an acceleration. In a swivel chair, the woman feels a force due to acceleration because her direction is constantly changing as she spins.

Baseball player: A baseball player applies a large force to a baseball, accelerating it to high velocity. If the ball had more mass, that same force would not accelerate the ball to such a high velocity.

Cars: When a driver hits the gas, the wheels apply a force on the ground due to friction. This force accelerates the car forward. The brakes apply a force to the wheels, which in turn apply a frictional force to the ground, decelerating the car. So the gas pedal and the brakes are both accelerators, since they change the speed of the car. Because velocity is the combination of speed and direction, the steering wheel is an accelerator too! It changes the direction, and therefore the velocity of the car.

Background information:

Newton’s Second Law takes up where the First Law ends. The First Law describes inertia: A body will not change its existing state of motion without an unbalanced force acting on that body. In other words, without an unbalanced force a body will remain still if still, or, if moving, keep moving in the same direction at a constant speed.

But what happens when an unbalanced force acts on an object? The Second Law tells us that this type of force will change the velocity of an object by changing either its speed or its direction or both. Such changes in velocity are called acceleration. So, we can say that any unbalanced force acting on an object produces acceleration.

The Second Law goes on to mathematically define the exact relationship between force and acceleration: The acceleration of an object is directly proportional to the sum of all the forces acting on it and is inversely proportional to its mass. Mass is simply the measure of the quantity of matter that makes up an object. The more mass an object has the more difficult it is to change its state of motion, whether it is at rest or moving in a straight line at a constant speed. Think of it this way: An elephant has more mass than a mouse. It is much harder to push an elephant across a floor than it is a mouse, and much harder to stop the elephant once it is moving. We can also say that the elephant has much more inertia than does a mouse – inertia and mass are just different ways of expressing the same concept.

Also, the direction of the acceleration is in the direction of the unbalanced (net) force acting on the object. More simply, and as Newton put it: F=ma, where “F” (force) and “a” (acceleration) are both vector quantities, meaning they have a magnitude and a direction (we have used boldface type to remind us of this), and “m” is the object’s mass. Note that the “F” in this equation is the net force, that is, the vector sum of all the forces acting on the object. [Aurore: put this next bit in a “note” box] Vectors are not part of the 6-8 grade standards, and so they will not be mentioned again on these posters. This introduction to them was added for the benefit of the instructor.

In SI units, mass is measured in kilograms, acceleration is in meters per second per second, and the unit of force is the newton (N). One newton is the force required to impart an acceleration of 1 m/sec2 to a mass of 1 kg (1N = 1 kg m/sec2). By the way, the newton unit of measurement was named in honor of Sir Isaac himself.

Newton’s Second Law and the Swift Satellite

Swift has a mass of about 1,470 kilograms, which is about the same total mass as 20 people! In order to get the Swift satellite into orbit, it was launched from a Boeing Delta rocket which had a mass of about 231,800 kg. With Swift inside the rocket, the combined mass of the two, m = 233,270 kg! According to Newton’s First Law, on the launch pad, both Swift and its rocket remain at rest until the rocket boosters begin to fire.

At this moment, the Earth’s gravity pulls the rocket (with Swift inside) down with a force of about 2,286,000 newtons. We can calculate this using Newton’s Second Law, Fgravity = ma = mg, where on the Earth’s surface the gravitational acceleration g = 9.8 m/s2 in a direction pointing down towards the Earth. But by burning fuel, the rocket’s boosters can exert an upward force of about Fbooster = 2,722,000 newtons. As the rocket lifts off, its booster rockets exert an unbalanced upward force of Ftotal = Fbooster - Fgravity = 2,722,000 newtons - 2,286,000 = 436,000 newtons. With a total mass of 233,270 kg, the rocket accelerated upward at a rate of 1.8 meters per second per second (a = Ftotal/m). In other words, for every second of travel time the rocket will increase its velocity by almost 2 meters per second.

[Put in a picture here of the rocket with arrows on it – the bigger one pulling up out of the nose of the rocket labeled Fbooster, and the smaller one pulling down out of the tail of the rocket, labeled Fgravity.]

However, the motion of Swift and its rocket is a bit more complicated - they do not travel in a straight line vertically up from the Earth’s surface. To understand what really happens, we need to remember Newton’s First Law: an object traveling in a straight line will continue its motion in a straight line, unless acted on by an unbalanced force. And we need to remember that the Earth is spinning! So Swift and its rocket are also moving in the direction of the Earth’s spin, at the time that they leave the Earth’s surface.

The eastward velocity of the spinning Earth at Cape Canaveral, Florida, which is at a latitude of about 28.5 degrees north of the Equator, is about 400 m/s. This gives Swift a horizontal motion or velocity that will continue unchecked, since there are no horizontal forces to counteract this motion. In addition, Swift’s rocket’s second stage was fired at three different times during its first orbit around the Earth to add additional acceleration that increased Swift’s horizontal velocity. (Swift was launched at 12:16 PM on November 20, 2004. The second stage fired from 12:20 – 12:26 PM, from 12:42 to 12:44 PM and again, very briefly, at 1:27 PM.)

By the time the rocket boosters have burned all their fuel and have released Swift into orbit around the Earth, the only force acting on Swift is that of the Earth’s gravity, but Swift still maintains its horizontal velocity that arose from the Earth’s spin and the sum of the horizontal accelerations due to the three periods of time when the second stage rocket fired. It is the balance between this horizontal velocity and the downward acceleration due to gravity that keeps Swift orbiting the Earth for many years. (Footnote: eventually the small amount of air pushing on Swift in the Earth’s atmosphere at the height of Swift’s 600 km orbit will slow down its horizontal motion, gravity will prevail and Swift will return to Earth. But this is not expected to happen for many years.)

[New diagram here showing the force of gravity and another arrow out of Swift with velocity on it, orbiting the Earth.

See figure in http://spaceplace.nasa.gov/en/kids/ds1_mgr.shtml]

Pre-Class discussion:

For each of the following events:

1)  A ball dropped straight down to the ground

2)  The ball thrown straight up into the air

3)  The ball thrown horizontally with respect to the ground.

4)  A ball thrown at a target on the ground from a person sitting on a spinning chair

Ask the students:

  1. What kind of path will the ball will take? What shape will that path be?
  2. What is the velocity of the ball before it is thrown or dropped?
  3. What is the direction of the velocity of the ball after it is thrown or dropped?
  4. What forces act on the ball after it is thrown or dropped?
  5. What is the acceleration of the ball after it is thrown or dropped?

[Aurore: put these next two paragraphs in separate callout boxes]

A common misconception held by students is that the person continues to exert force on the ball, even after it leaves their hand. Many students believe that an object needs a force acting on it in order to continue its motion in a straight line.

For a fun, interactive version of this activity using a merry-go-round at a playground, see this URL at NASA’s Space Place: http://spaceplace.nasa.gov/en/kids/ds1_mgr.shtml

Answers to pre-class discussion:

1)

  1. The path is shown in cartoon 1, in the in-class activity below.
  1. The velocity of the ball is zero before it is dropped.
  1. The direction of the velocity is straight down.
  1. The only force that acts on the ball is the force of gravity.
  1. The acceleration of the ball is due to the force of gravity and is towards the Earth (or
  2. g = -9.8 m/sec2).

2)

  1. The path is shown by cartoon 2 in the in-class activity below.
  1. The velocity of the ball is zero before it is thrown.
  1. The direction of the velocity is straight up until the ball reaches the peak of its trajectory. Afterwards, it is straight down. (In cartoon 2, we have the ball caught by a hand at the peak of its trajectory. However, the path down looks identical to the path up.)
  1. The only force that acts on the ball is the force of gravity.
  1. The acceleration of the ball is due to the force of gravity and is towards the Earth (or
  2. g = -9.8 m/sec2).

3)

  1. The path of the ball is shown by cartoon 3 in the in-class activity below.
  1. The velocity of the ball is zero before it is thrown.
  1. The direction of the velocity is initially all horizontal, however, as gravity begins to act on the ball, a vertical component of the velocity is created, causing a trajectory that is curved towards the ground. At the time that the ball hits the ground, it has both horizontal and vertical components.
  1. The only force that acts on the ball is the force of gravity.
  1. The acceleration of the ball is due to the force of gravity and is towards the Earth (or g = -9.8 m/sec2).

4)